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Inbreeding and testicular abnormalities in a bottlenecked population of koalas (Phascolarctos cinereus)

journal contribution
posted on 2009-01-01, 00:00 authored by R Cristescu, V Cahill, W Sherwin, K Handasyde, K Carlyon, Desley WhissonDesley Whisson, C Herbert, B Carlsson, A Wilton, D Cooper
Habitat destruction and fragmentation, interactions with introduced species or the relocation of animals to form new populations for conservation purposes may result in a multiplication of population bottlenecks. Examples are the translocations of koalas to French Island and its derivative Kangaroo Island population, with both populations established as insurance policies against koala extinction. In terms of population size, these conservation programs were success stories. However, the genetic story could be different. We conducted a genetic investigation of French and Kangaroo Island koalas by using 15 microsatellite markers, 11 of which are described here for the first time. The results confirm very low genetic diversity. French Island koalas have 3.8 alleles per locus and Kangaroo Island koalas 2.4. The present study found a 19% incidence of testicular abnormality in kangaroo Island animals. Internal relatedness, an individual inbreeding coefficient, was not significantly different in koalas with testicular abnormalities from that in other males, suggesting the condition is not related to recent inbreeding. It could instead result from an unfortunate selection of founder individuals carrying alleles for testicular abnormalities, followed by a subsequent increase in these alleles’ frequencies through genetic drift and small population-related inefficiency of selection. Given the low diversity and possible high prevalence of deleterious alleles, the genetic viability of the population remains uncertain, despite its exponential growth so far. This stands as a warning to other introductions for conservation reasons.

History

Journal

Wildlife research

Volume

36

Issue

4

Pagination

299 - 308

Publisher

CSIRO Publishing

Location

Australia

ISSN

1035-3712

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal; C Journal article